Willingness to pay up may not save bank scam colluders: SC


UPSC Study Note — Willingness to Pay Up May Not Save Bank Scam Colluders: SC


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
2010s ADAG group companies (RCom, Reliance Power, Reliance Commercial Finance, Reliance Home Finance) availed large bank loans
2019–20 Companies defaulted; banks classified accounts as NPAs; allegations of fund diversion emerged
2020 onwards CBI registers 8 separate FIRs; ED registers 3 ECIRs (Enforcement Case Information Reports) under PMLA [S2]
2020–24 ED issues 13 provisional attachment orders covering 204 properties worth ~₹12,012 crore; conducts 46 searches, issues 305 summons, records 213 statements, makes 4 arrests, files 2 prosecution complaints [S2]
Early 2026 Supreme Court takes up the matter, flags delay in filing charge-sheet/complaint; orders SIT formation
Feb 5, 2026 CJI Surya Kant's Bench rules that willingness-to-pay cannot compound offences if siphoning intent is proven [S1]
Feb–Mar 2026 ED constitutes SIT as directed; SC bars Anil Ambani from leaving India without SC permission [S2][S3]

4. Core Static Facts

The Case: - Accused: Anil Ambani and Anil Dhirubhai Ambani Group (ADAG) - Quantum of alleged fraud: ≈ ₹40,000–41,000 crore (bank loans allegedly siphoned) [S2] - Companies involved: Reliance Communications (RCom), Reliance Power, Reliance Commercial Finance Ltd (RCFL), Reliance Home Finance Ltd (RHFL) [S2]

Investigating Agencies: - CBI — criminal investigation; registered 8 separate cases [S2] - ED — money laundering probe under PMLA; registered 3 ECIRs [S2]

Court: - Bench: Three-judge Bench of the Supreme Court - Presiding Judge: CJI Surya Kant - Key direction: ED to form SIT of senior officers; CBI to ensure fair probe [S1]

Key Statutory Framework: | Law | Relevance | |-----|-----------| | PMLA, 2002 | Money laundering prosecution by ED | | IPC (now BNS, 2023) | Criminal conspiracy, cheating, breach of trust | | Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988 | Applicability to bank officials who colluded; Section 17A (sanction for prosecution of public servants) dismissed as "misconceived" by SC [S2] | | Banking Regulation Act, 1949 | Regulatory framework for bank loans |

ED Actions: - 13 provisional attachment orders [S2] - 204 properties attached worth ~₹12,012 crore [S2] - 46 searches, 305 summons, 213 statements recorded [S2] - 4 arrests, 2 prosecution complaints filed [S2]


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Legal / Constitutional

Economic / Banking

Ethical / Governance

Administrative

Historical


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks (High-Density Factual Bullets)

  1. The ADAG banking fraud case involves alleged siphoning of approximately ₹40,000–41,000 crore from bank loans. [S2]
  2. The Supreme Court Bench hearing the case was headed by Chief Justice of India Surya Kant (3-judge Bench). [S1]
  3. ED registered 3 ECIRs (Enforcement Case Information Reports) under PMLA against ADAG companies. [S2]
  4. CBI registered 8 separate cases in connection with the ADAG fraud. [S2]
  5. ED issued 13 provisional attachment orders covering 204 properties worth ~₹12,012 crore. [S2]
  6. ADAG companies involved: RCom, Reliance Power, Reliance Commercial Finance Ltd, Reliance Home Finance Ltd. [S2]
  7. SC directed the ED to constitute a SIT (Special Investigation Team) of senior officers. [S1]
  8. SC ordered CBI to probe "nexus, connivance, conspiracy, collusion" among bank officials, authorities, and company managements. [S1]
  9. Section 17A of Prevention of Corruption Act (requiring prior sanction to prosecute public servants) was dismissed as "misconceived" in this case. [S2]
  10. Senior advocate Mukul Rohatgi appeared for Anil Ambani; Shyam Divan appeared for ADAG. [S1]
  11. SC ruled that offences involving deliberate intent to siphon public funds cannot be compounded merely because the accused is willing to pay. [S1]
  12. ED made 4 arrests and filed 2 prosecution complaints under PMLA in the ADAG case. [S2]
  13. SC barred Anil Ambani from leaving India without prior Supreme Court permission. [S3]
  14. The ED conducted 46 searches and issued 305 summons in the ADAG probe. [S2]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Papers: - GS-II: Governance, transparency and accountability; role of judiciary; statutory bodies (CBI, ED). - GS-III: Indian economy; banking sector; NPAs; money laundering; white-collar crime. - GS-IV: Ethics in public life; conflict of interest; corruption in banking.

Syllabus Headings: - GS-II: Functioning of the judiciary; government policies and interventions. - GS-III: Indian economy, mobilization of resources; banking sector issues; money laundering.

Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "The Supreme Court's observation in the ADAG bank fraud case — that willingness to repay cannot save those who siphon public funds from criminal prosecution — has significant implications for economic offence jurisprudence in India. Discuss." (GS-II/III) 2. "Examine the institutional and regulatory gaps that enable large-scale banking frauds in India. How can the framework under PMLA, CBI, and ED be strengthened to ensure time-bound prosecution?" (GS-III) 3. "Collusion between bank officials and corporate borrowers in fund diversion raises questions of systemic governance failure. Critically analyse with reference to recent judicial interventions." (GS-II/GS-IV)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
PMLA, 2002 and its amendments Primary statute under which ED investigates money laundering in the ADAG case
Non-Performing Assets (NPAs) in Indian Banking ADAG default is a textbook NPA-to-fraud escalation case
CBI — powers, structure, jurisdiction CBI is the parallel criminal investigating agency in this case
Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988 (Section 17A) Contested provision in this case; SC ruling clarifies its scope
Vijay Mallya / Nirav Modi Cases Comparable large-scale banking fraud + PMLA + extradition jurisprudence
Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC), 2016 Alternative resolution mechanism; interaction with criminal prosecution
RBI's Prompt Corrective Action (PCA) Framework Regulatory tool to prevent bank NPA crisis escalation
Sahara / Subrata Roy Case Precedent on SC-supervised deposit repayment vs. criminal liability

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Confusing ADAG with RIL: Anil Ambani's ADAG (Anil Dhirubhai Ambani Group) is entirely separate from Mukesh Ambani's Reliance Industries Limited (RIL). The companies here (RCom, Reliance Power) belong to ADAG, not RIL.

  2. Confusing "compounding" of offences: "Compounding" means settling a criminal case with the victim's consent (permitted under CrPC/BNSS for certain offences). The SC ruled that offences involving siphoning of public funds cannot be compounded — do not conflate this with civil debt settlement or IBC resolution.

  3. Mixing up Section 17A applicability: Section 17A of Prevention of Corruption Act requires prior government sanction before investigating a public servant. In this case, SC called its invocation "misconceived" — candidates often incorrectly treat it as universally applicable to all corruption probes.

  4. CBI vs. ED jurisdiction confusion: CBI investigates the underlying criminal offences (conspiracy, cheating, fraud). ED investigates the money laundering angle under PMLA. Both ran parallel probes — they are complementary, not alternative.

  5. Treating travel ban as arrest: The SC specifically noted it cannot direct Anil Ambani's arrest but imposed a travel restriction — these are legally distinct measures with different thresholds.


11. Sources